The Central Railroad of New Jersey, The Big Little Railroad

The Central Railroad of New Jersey has gone by a number of different
names from CNJ to Jersey Central and the aforementioned moniker.
Regardless of its many titles the CNJ was a New Jersey institution although it was only regional in operation and, at its peak, just 711 miles in length. The Jersey Central served much of its home state along with northwestern Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, and Washington D.C.
via a partnership with the Baltimore & Ohio. It also acquired a part of the old Lehigh & New England during the 1960s. The demise of
the CNJ was the result of several factors including a region too
saturated with railroads, stiff government regulation, and markets
already served by more efficient competitors (such as the Pennsylvania and Reading). However, for all of these setbacks the
railroad was further burdened by heavy taxation through the state of New Jersey. These issues ultimately led to the railroad’s bankruptcy and inclusion into Conrail in 1976. Today, little remains of the old CNJ lines.

The Central Railroad of New Jersey has a complicated and complex corporate history comprising numerous predecessors and subsidiaries which later came together to form the classic CNJ system. During the 19th century and into the early 20th, prior to the development of efficient highways, the railroad enjoyed a robust and healthy business. It lay in the busiest and most densely populated region in the country, moving thousands of commuters daily while a diverse traffic based handled everything from oil to milk. The Jersey Central's earliest ancestry comprised two notable systems; the Elizabethtown & Somerville, incorporated on February 9, 1831, and the Somerville & Easton, incorporated in 1847. The E&S took some time to get under way but finally did so on August 13, 1836 when it opened roughly 2 miles between Elizabeth and Elizabethport along the mouth of the Arthur Kill (until 1864 the CNJ operated ferry service between Elizabethport and New York City). At the time trains were only horse-drawn; steam power did not arrive until January 1, 1839 when the system had reached Plainfield.

Finally, on January 2, 1842 service extended to Somerville, completing the road's original charter. The Somerville & Easton began construction soon after its incorporation, opening between Somerville and White House on September 25, 1848. The creation of the CNJ was a result of the S&E acquiring the E&S, changing the name of both as the Central Railroad Company of New Jersey on April 23, 1849. Like most of the now-classic fallen flags, the CNJ expanded and grew through a combination of new construction and take over of smaller lines. Soon after the name change the new company continued pushing rails west until it had spanned its home state, opening service to Phillipsburg in 1852. This town grew into an important commercial center where five major railroads once met; including the CNJ these were the Lehigh & Hudson River; Lehigh Valley; Delaware, Lackawanna & Western; and Pennsylvania Railroad's Belvidere Division.

Pushing rails beyond Elizabethport to the Hudson River took a bit more work. However, doing so would offer the CNJ nearly-direct service into Manhattan, albeit requiring ferries to do so. In 1864 it completed an extension across the Newark Bay, via a one-mile long bridge to Jersey City where a small terminal was opened at what is today Liberty State Park. The facility, referred to as Communipaw Terminal, or Jersey City Terminal, was replaced with a much larger station in 1889 that served as one of the major Hudson River terminals until the postwar period. It was not only the CNJ's primary terminal into New York but also handled the trains of Reading and Baltimore & Ohio. The completion of the railroad's Jersey City connection constituted its "Central Division" from that point to Phillipsburg. It was the busiest component of the CNJ and carried four to six tracks along the 35-mile corridor between Jersey City and Raritan. According to the Classic Trains article, "Jersey Central: Coal, Commuters, And A Comet," this high-speed thoroughfare witnessed 300 commuter trains daily, carrying 35,000 riders, in addition to local freights which the railroad referred to as "drills." There were two other major divisions of the CNJ, which will be briefly highlighted below.

Southern Division

The Jersey Central's Southern Division, as its name implies, operated into the state's sparsely-populated southern regions (the so-called, "Pine Barrens") from Red Bank to Bridgeton/Bowentown/Bayside. During its heyday the trackage handled a variety of freight from agriculture to aggregates. It also moved commuters and vacationers to locations such as Atlantic City, Long Branch, and Tuckerton. The largest component of the Southern Division was the Raritan & Delaware Bay Railroad chartered in 1854. It was originally intended to link New York with the important Virginia port of Norfolk, via steamship service across the Delaware Bay. While this plan ultimately never materialized the system did construct a significant stretch of trackage across New Jersey. It opened its first segment in 1860 between Port Monmouth and Bergen Iron Works (Lakewood) via Red Bank. Thanks to a relatively flat topography, grading and construction commenced quickly and by 1862 had reached Winslow where a connection was made with the Camden & Atlantic offering through service to Camden, New Jersey.

In 1870 the R&DB was renamed as the New Jersey Southern Railroad (later reorganized as the New Jersey Southern Railway in 1880) and extensions beyond Winslow were the result of acquiring the Vineland Railway in 1872 (via lease), which had opened to Bayside in 1871. The completion of this line constituted the extent of the Southern Division's main line although there were branches later added to the network reaching Tuckerton/Barnegat, Deerfield, and Bivalve while carferry service was established to Woodland Beach, Delaware via Bayside. Arguably the most important segment of the Southern Division was the New York & Long Branch Railroad, chartered on April 8, 1868. The line's construction did not begin for some time although the CNJ already held a controlling interest by 1873. The NY&LB connected the Central's northern New Jersey lines with the NJS properties to the south. It opened for service between Perth Amboy and Long Branch in 1875, eventually extending southward to Bay Head Junction by 1882. The NY&LB proved a major commuter corridor within a quickly expanding region and rival Pennsylvania Railroad wanted in; it launched plans to build a competing line but ultimately the two roads agreed to mutually share the NY&LB in January of 1882 with the CNJ handling freight duties.

Lehigh & Susquehanna Division/Pennsylvania Division

The Jersey Central's trackage within Pennsylvania, west of Easton, was known by different names over the years, first as the Lehigh & Susquehanna Division and then later the Pennsylvania, or Penn Division. The territory was the road's vitally important freight corridor, earning it the status of an anthracite carrier. The division's original moniker was derived from a railroad of the same name, the Lehigh & Susquehanna, founded in 1837 as a component of the Lehigh Coal & Navigation Company. It opened for service in 1843, moving anthracite coal from the Lehigh Canal at White Haven to Wilkes-Barre situated along the North Branch Canal. The road was slowly extended southward from White Haven over the years reaching Mauch Chunk (later renamed Jim Thorpe) in 1867 and finally Phillipsburg in 1868. In 1871 the CNJ formally leased the L&S and in the subsequent years added many branches to tap additional mines reaching locations such as Lehigh, Lee, Nanticoke, and Audenreid. Its last notable extension occurred with the opening of the Wilkes-Barre & Scranton in 1888 between Pittston and Scranton.

This area of eastern Pennsylvania lay in the heart of anthracite country and numerous railroads could be found operating there which included the Lehigh Valley, Erie, Lackawanna, Lehigh & Hudson River, Lehigh & New England, Reading, Delaware & Hudson, Ontario & Western, and even the Pennsylvania. In addition, cities like Easton, Scranton, Wilkes-Barre, and previously-mentioned Phillipsburg grew into robust manufacturing centers while Bethlehem was a steel-producing mecca. Following the turn of the century, in 1901 the Reading took control of the CNJ, which lasted until 1976 and Conrail (the Reading, itself was acquired by the B&O in 1903). This railroad was similar to the Jersey Central in that it handled large volumes of anthracite coal from the eastern Pennsylvania coalfields while also carrying considerable merchandise and commuter traffic from the New Jersey, Tri-State, and Philadelphia regions. The CNJ remained a profitable system until the Great Depression and carried out several improvement projects prior to that time. Classic Trains Magazine notes that it put the first automatic semaphore signal into service in 1893 and upgraded the bridge across Newark Bay as a four-track, 1.4-mile drawbridge in 1926 to handle increasing demand.

At its peak, the Central Railroad of New Jersey operated 700 route miles clustered within a dense network that in total boasted some 1,900 track miles! While the railroad was successful during its early years, as demand for anthracite waned after the 1920s and the impending Great Depression further decimated the business environment, the CNJ fell on hard times. It entered bankruptcy in 1939 and did not emerge until after World War II, in 1949. It also struggled to deal with New Jersey's increasing tax burden while rising operating/labor costs coupled with declining patronage meant commuter and passenger trains were no longer profitable operations. The CNJ was a finely-tuned operation at the turn of the 20th century. Its visionaries had comprised a system built for handling commuters and anthracite coal, which they believed would be a viable business virtually forever. Alas, they could never have predicted the rise of the automobile or falling demand for coal; ultimately, the railroad's busy years lasted but a few decades.

The Northeast’s traffic base shrank after World War II as manufacturing moved out of the region and ever-expanding highways pulled away short-haul freight. By the 1960s, the companies mentioned above were facing destitution; there were simply too many railroads and not enough traffic. Roads like the Reading, LV, and CNJ were hit especially hard as they all relied heavily on anthracite, which was no longer profitable as demand had almost completely disappeared. In a somewhat ironic twist, the CNJ actually grew during this period when it acquired segments of the former segments of the Lehigh & New England, totaling about 41 miles in Pennsylvania, which had shut down in 1961. As Walter Kraus notes in his article, "Real Demise Of Rail Line Trailed Coal's Decline," from the August 24, 1989 edition of The Morning Call, the CNJ purchased this trackage for $10 million with the sale made effective on October 31, 1961. These lines included Tadmor Yard at Bath, the Bethlehem Branch, the Martins Creek Branch, trackage around Catasauqua, and the former Panther Creek Railroad to Tamaqua.

As red ink continued to flow the CNJ entered its final bankruptcy in 1967. That same year, New Jersey's Aldene Plan went into effect in an effort to curb the significant losses railroads were incurring from passenger/commuter operations. This move saw a new connection built to the Lehigh Valley at Aldene allowing CNJ trains to reach PRR's Pennsylvania Station in Newark and eliminating service at Jersey City Terminal. With the closure of JCT, the Newark Bay Drawbridge also became redundant and was eventually razed by the U.S. Coast Guard during the 1980s. In a last ditch attempt to reduce its considerable losses the CNJ embargoed all lines in Pennsylvania in 1972, which were picked up by the Lehigh Valley. In the end, nothing worked and the railroad, which boasted perhaps the most patriotic of all
railroad logos, Lady Liberty (a logo it acquired in 1944 when the company became known as the "Jersey Central Lines"), quietly disappeared into Conrail on April 1, 1976. The Jersey Central was, of course, a small railroad in
comparison to most other classic systems. However, for her small
size she held numerous achievements and feats. In addition to those previously mentioned they include the first
commercially successful diesel locomotive, The Blue Comet
(the CNJ's most successful and famous passenger train connecting Jersey
City with Atlantic City), and a four track main line that stretched
from Jersey City to Raritan, New Jersey.

Diesel Locomotive Roster

The American Locomotive Company

Model Type

Road Number

Date Built

Quantity

HH-600

1020-1023

1938

4

S1

1024-1025

1941

2

S2

1067-1071

1944

5

RS1

1200-1205

1950-1951

6

RS3

1540-1555, 1700-1709

1950-1953

26

RSD4

1600-1614

1951-1952

15

RSD5

1615

1953

1

The Baldwin Locomotive Works

Model Type

Road Number

Date Built

Quantity

DR-4-4-1500 (Babyface)

70-79

1947-1948

10

DR-4-4-1500 (Babyface)

K, L, M, R, S (Bs)

1947-1948

5

VO-660

1040-1043

1942

4

RS12

1053-1059

1951

7

VO-1000

1062-1066

1944

5

DR-4-4-1000

1072-1074

1950

3

RS12

1206-1209

1953

4

DRX-6-4-2000 (Duel Cabs)

2000-2005

1946-1948

6

The Electro-Motive Corporation/Electro-Motive Division

Model Type

Road Number

Date Built

Quantity

F3A

50-59

1947

10

F3B

A-E

1947

5

SC

1005-1008

1939

4

SW1

1009-1012

1939-1942

4

NW2

1060-1061

1942

2

SW7

1080-1083

1950

4

SW9

1084-1094

1951-1952

11

GP7

1520-1532

1952

13

GP9

1531-1532

1959

2

GP40P

3671-3683

1968

13

Fairbanks Morse

Model Type

Road Number

Date Built

Quantity

H15-44

1501-1513

1949

13

H16-44

1514-1517

1950

13

H24-66 (Train Master)

2401-2413

1954-1956

13

General Electric/Ingersoll-Rand

Model Type

Road Number

Date Built

Quantity

Boxcab 60T

1000

1925

1

Steam Locomotive Roster

Class

Type

Wheel Arrangement

A-1

Switcher

0-4-0T

B-2 Through B-7

Switcher

0-6-0

E-1 Through E-4

Switcher

0-8-0

G-1s Through G-4s

Pacific

4-6-2

H-1s

Hudson

4-6-4T

I-4s Through I-6as

Consolidation

2-8-0

J-1s

Prairie

2-6-2T

K-1, K-1s

Twelve-Wheeler

4-8-0

L-3s Through L-8s

Ten-Wheeler

4-6-0

M-1s, M-2s, M-2as

Mikado

2-8-2

P-6, P-6s

Atlantic

4-4-2

Sadly, the State of New Jersey and its politicians were not kind to
the railroad's infrastructure, which would have offered a superb commuter corridor today. Conrail saw little need for the CNJ lines and either sold or abandoned much of the property; its four-track main is completely gone while only sparse sections remain in use. The Jersey City Terminal
is still standing as a museum but has not seen a train call to her
sheds since the controversial Aldene Plan went into effect. In the end, many historians have felt the railroad was shredded by the state, milked through taxes and abandoned over time without realizing its potential to the Tri-State area. Today, highways and interstates are choked with traffic as politicians try to find alternatives to ease the burden. While the Jersey Central is now but a memory a few of its lines still serve commuters while others handle some freight. Finally, segments of its Southern Division have been left in place and may see freight service again one day.

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